Numerical models of sheath fold development in rheologically heterogeneous rocks of the Cima Lunga-Adula shear zone (Central Alps)

Author(s):  
Filippo Luca Schenker ◽  
Marta Adamuszek ◽  
Matteo Maino

<p>Highly curvilinear folds develop during simple shear deformation due to perturbations in the velocity field around the inclusion heterogeneity. In the field, such structures may be recognized at the micro- and meso-scale within high-strain crustal-scale shear zones. However, at scarce outcrop conditions, fragments of these structures are often interpreted as generated by poly-phase deformation. The structural history becomes even more complex when the deformation within the inclusion is considered. In this inclusion-matrix deformation system, two end-member regimes has been already investigated: (i) a weak ellipsoidal inclusion that acts as a slip surface over which sheath folds develop and (ii) a rigid ellipsoidal inclusion that rotates within the matrix generating sheath folds in the back of the rotating ellipse in direction of the shearing. Between these two end-members, understanding the clast-matrix deformational regime is not trivial and the genesis of sheath fold is unexplored.</p><p>We employed 3D numerical models to study fold structure evolution around an ellipsoidal inclusion within a matrix during simple shear. Both inclusion and matrix were homogeneous and isotropic, and had linear viscous rheologies. We tested models with different (i) initial inclusion aspect ratio, (ii) viscosity ratio between the inclusion and the matrix, and (iii) strain. We identified three main deformation regimes that are closely related with the behaviour of the inclusion. In the first regime, the inclusion experiences massive stretching. In the second regime, we observe oscillatory motion of the principal inclusion axes and the deformation of the material lines within inclusion periodically changes from shortening to stretching conditions. In the third regime, principal inclusion axes rotate. The material lines within inclusion, similar as in the second regime, experience cyclic stretching and shortening, however, the amount of extension and shortening is significantly smaller. The transition between regimes is dependent of both initial inclusion aspect ratio and viscosity ratio. The first regime is characteristic for inclusions with small viscosity ratio. With increasing viscosity ratio, the regime changes to the second and eventually to the third. The change occurs at lower viscosity ratio for models with larger initial inclusion aspect ratio than for smaller once. All the models developed sheath folds around the inclusions.</p><p>The results of our simulations were compared with the deformation pattern derived from a main shear zone of the Cima-Lunga in the Central Alps. In the field, the elongated high-pressure ultramafic bodies are surrounded by folded amphibolite-facies paragneisses that locally depict sheath folds. The internal structures of ultramafic bodies are characterize by recumbent, sub-isoclinal folds and folded boudinaged mafic layers that suggest internal changes in stress direction. In a selected ultramafic body elongated sub-parallel to the shearing direction and with an aspect ratio a/c=3 and b/c=2, we estimate from a mafic boudinaged layer subparallel to the a/c axis a minimum stretching of 40%. This field data allowed us to establish that the viscosity ratio of the ultramafic body to the paragneisses at the time of the deformation of the shear zone was in the range of 4-11 and the strain was γ>13.</p>

2016 ◽  
Vol 791 ◽  
pp. 738-757 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Dupont ◽  
F. Delahaye ◽  
D. Barthès-Biesel ◽  
A.-V. Salsac

The objective of the paper is to determine the stable mechanical equilibrium states of an oblate capsule subjected to a simple shear flow, by positioning its revolution axis initially off the shear plane. We consider an oblate capsule with a strain-hardening membrane and investigate the influence of the initial orientation, capsule aspect ratio$a/b$, viscosity ratio${\it\lambda}$between the internal and external fluids and the capillary number$Ca$which compares the viscous to the elastic forces. A numerical model coupling the finite element and boundary integral methods is used to solve the three-dimensional fluid–structure interaction problem. For any initial orientation, the capsule converges towards the same mechanical equilibrium state, which is only a function of the capillary number and viscosity ratio. For$a/b=0.5$, only four regimes are stable when${\it\lambda}=1$: tumbling and swinging in the low and medium$Ca$range ($Ca\lesssim 1$), regimes for which the capsule revolution axis is contained within the shear plane; then wobbling during which the capsule experiences precession around the vorticity axis; and finally rolling along the vorticity axis at high capillary numbers. When${\it\lambda}$is increased, the tumbling-to-swinging transition occurs for higher$Ca$; the wobbling regime takes place at lower$Ca$values and within a narrower$Ca$range. For${\it\lambda}\gtrsim 3$, the swinging regime completely disappears, which indicates that the stable equilibrium states are mainly the tumbling and rolling regimes at higher viscosity ratios. We finally show that the$Ca$–${\it\lambda}$phase diagram is qualitatively similar for higher aspect ratio. Only the$Ca$-range over which wobbling is stable increases with$a/b$, restricting the stability ranges of in- and out-of-plane motions, although this phenomenon is mainly visible for viscosity ratios larger than 1.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
pp. 1338-1354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mel R. Stauffer ◽  
John F. Lewry

Needle Falls Shear Zone is the southern part of a major northeast-trending ductile shear system within the Paleoproterozoic Trans-Hudson Orogen in Saskatchewan. Throughout its exposed length of ~400 km, the shear zone separates reworked Archean continental crust and infolded Paleoproterozoic supracrustals of the Cree Lake Zone, to the northwest, from mainly juvenile Paleoproterozoic arc terrains and granitoid plutons of the Reindeer Zone, to the southeast. It also defines the northwest margin of the ca. 1855 Ma Wathaman Batholith, which forms the main protolith to shear zone mylonites. Although not precisely dated, available age constraints suggest that the shear zone formed between ca. 1855 and 1800 Ma, toward the end of peak thermotectonism in this part of the orogen.In the Needle Falls study area, shear zone mylonites exhibit varied, sequentially developed, ductile to brittle fabric features, including C–S fabrics, winged porphyroclasts (especially delta type), small-scale compressional and extensional microfaults ranging from thin ductile shear zones to late brittle faults, early isoclinal and sheath folds, later asymmetric folds related to compressional microfaults, and variably rotated and (or) folded quartz veins. All ductile shear-sense indicators suggest dextral displacement, as do most later ductile–brittle transition and brittle features. In conjunction with a gently north–northeast-plunging extension lineation, such data indicate oblique east-side-up dextral movement across the shear zone. However, preexisting structures in country rock protoliths rotate into the shear zone in a sense contrary to that predicted by ideal dextral simple shear, a feature thought to reflect significant flattening across the shear zone. Other ductile to brittle fabric elements in the mylonites are consistent with general noncoaxial strain, rather than ideal simple shear. Amount of displacement cannot be measured but indirect estimates suggest approximately 40 ± 20 km.The Needle Falls Shear Zone is too small and has developed too late in regional tectonic history to be considered a crustal suture. Rather, it is interpreted as either a late-tectonic oblique collisional structure or as the result of counterclockwise oroclinal rotation of the southern part of the orogen.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (01) ◽  
pp. 1850011
Author(s):  
Ilige Hage ◽  
Ramsey F. Hamade

This work characterizes the stiffness of a finite domain containing one (biaxial ellipsoidal) void due to the combined effect of inclusion’s attributes: (1) size or volume fraction, VF, (2) shape or aspect ratio, AR, (3) angular orientation, and (4) location (position) within the matrix. The values and ranges of these ellipsoidal inclusion attributes are varied according to a matrix developed using design of experiments (DOE). Modified Mori–Tanaka method combined with dual-eigenstrain method (interior and exterior eigenstrain methods) is used to determine the effective stiffness tensor of the composite domain. Employing the numerically calculated normalized axial modulus [Formula: see text] values in SAS/STAT®, a nonlinear mathematical expression of [Formula: see text] as function of the void’s variables is arrived at Stiffness values found from the numerical homogenization scheme are experimentally corroborated using compression tests conducted on 3D-printed ABS cubes having a single ellipsoidal inclusion of various geometric attributes. In addition, finite element simulations were run of said uniaxial compression test cases to further validate the numerical homogenization results. Corroborated findings suggest that while the location of the inclusions in the matrix have no significant effect on normalized modulus [Formula: see text], the void’s volume fraction has the largest effect where it decreases with VF. The effect of the void’s orientation and elliptical aspect ratio are significant. [Formula: see text] increases with AR at angles ranging from 0–[Formula: see text]; at [Formula: see text][Formula: see text] are almost constant with AR, at angles of 60–[Formula: see text] values of [Formula: see text] decrease with AR. As AR approaches unity, the effect of orientation decreases significantly.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jirapat Charoensawan ◽  
Ludmila Adam ◽  
Michael Ofman ◽  
Virginia Toy ◽  
Jonathan Simpson ◽  
...  

P-wave anisotropy is significant in the mylonitic Alpine Fault shear zone. Mineral- and texture-induced anisotropy are dominant in these rocks but further complicated by the presence of fractures. Electron back-scattered diffraction and synchrotron X-ray microtomography (micro-CT) data are acquired on exhumed schist, protomylonite, mylonite, and ultramylonite samples to quantify mineral phases, crystal preferred orientations, microfractures, and porosity. The samples are composed of quartz, plagioclase, mica and accessory garnet, and contain 3–5% porosity. Based on the micro-CT data, the representative pore shape has an aspect ratio of 5:2:1. Two numerical models are compared to calculate the velocity of fractured rocks: a 2D wave propagation model, and a differential effective medium model (3D). The results from both models have comparable pore-free fast and slow velocities of 6.5 and 5.5 km/s, respectively. Introducing 5% fractures with 5:2:1 aspect ratio, oriented with the longest axes parallel to foliation decreases these velocities to 6.3 and 5.0 km/s, respectively. Adding both randomly oriented and foliation-parallel fractures hinders the anisotropy increase with fracture volume. The anisotropy becomes independent of porosity when 80% of fractures are randomly oriented. Modeled anisotropy in 2D and 3D are different for similar fracture aspect ratios, being 30 and 15%, respectively. This discrepancy is the result of the underlying assumptions and limitations. Our numerical results explain the effects that fracture orientations and shapes have on previously published field- and laboratory-based studies. Through this numerical study, we show how mica-dominated, pore-free P-wave anisotropy compares to that of fracture volume, shape and orientation for protolith and shear zone rocks of the Alpine Fault.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnab Roy ◽  
Nandan Roy ◽  
Puspendu Saha ◽  
Nibir Mandal

<p>Development of brittle and brittle-ductile shear zones involve partitioning of large shear strains in bands, called C-shear bands (C-SB) nearly parallel to the shear zone boundaries. Our present work aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of the rheological factors in controlling such SB growth in meter scale natural brittle- ductile shear zones observed in in Singbhum and Chotonagpur mobile belts.  The shear zones show C- SB at an angle of 0°- 5° with the shear zone boundary. We used analogue models, based on Coulomb and Viscoplastic rheology to reproduce them in experimental conditions.</p><p>These models produce dominantly Riedel (R) shear bands. We show a transition from R-shearing in conjugate to single sets at angles of ~15<sup>o</sup> by changing model materials. However, none of the analogue models produced C-SB, as observed in the field. To reconcile the experimental and field findings, numeral models have been used to better constrain the geometrical and rheological parameters. We simulate model shear zones replicating those observed in the field, which display two distinct zones: drag zone where the viscous strains dominate  and the core zone, where both viscous and plastic strains come into play.  Numerical model results suggest the formation of  C- SB for a specific rheological condition. We also show varying shear band patterns as a function of the thickness ratio between drag and core zones.</p>


1997 ◽  
Vol 506 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Marschall ◽  
J. Croisé ◽  
U. Fischer ◽  
R. Senger ◽  
E. Wyss

ABSTRACTGas threshold pressure tests and gas tracer tests have been performed at the Grimsel Test Site to study two-phase flow processes in a shear zone. In addition, capillary pressure and gas permeability measurements were carried out in the laboratory on drillcore samples. The laboratory investigations were complemented by assessing the pore structure of the shear zone material. The interpretation of the field tests with numerical models indicated that the structural and two-phase flow parameters to be determined are highly correlated with one another and, consequently, the parameter estimates can be rather uncertain. The joint interpretation of field and laboratory results, however, led to a more stringent description of the two-phase flow processes, expressed by a better overall fit of the test data and smaller uncertainty ranges of the estimated parameters. The results showed that the gas mobility in the shear zone was very high even at high water saturation and gas flow was limited to the narrow zones of brittle deformation along the shear zone.


2012 ◽  
Vol 149 (5) ◽  
pp. 819-826 ◽  
Author(s):  
SOUMYAJIT MUKHERJEE

AbstractThis work develops an analytical model of shear senses within an inclined ductile simple shear zone with parallel rigid boundaries and incompressible Newtonian viscous rheology. Taking account of gravity that tends to drive the material downdip and a possible pressure gradient that drives it upward along the shear zone, it is shown that (i) contradictory shear senses develop within two sub-zones even as a result of a single simple shear deformation; (ii) the highest velocity and least shear strain develop along the contact between the two sub-zones of reverse shear; (iii) for a uniform shear sense of the boundaries, a zone of reverse shear may develop within the top of the shear zone if the pressure gradient dominates the gravity component; otherwise it forms near the bottom boundary; (iv-a) a ‘pivot’ defined by the intersection between the velocity profile and the initial marker position distinguishes two sub-zones of opposite movement directions (not shear sense); (iv-b) a pivot inside any non-horizontal shear zone indicates a part of the zone that extrudes while the other subducts simultaneously; (v) the same shear sense develops: (v-a) when under a uniform shear of the boundaries, the shear zone remains horizontal and the pressure gradient vanishes; or alternatively (v-b) if the shear zone is inclined but the gravity component counterbalances the pressure gradient. Zones with shear sense reversal need to be reinterpreted since a pro-sheared sub-zone can retro-shear if the flow parameters change their magnitudes even though the same shear sense along the boundaries is maintained.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Whitney Behr ◽  
Taras Gerya

<p>The deep roots of subduction megathrusts exhibit aseismic slow slip events, commonly accompanied by tremor and low-frequency earthquakes. Observations from exhumed rocks suggest that the deep subduction interface is a shear zone in which frictional lenses are embedded in a weaker, distributed viscous matrix deformed under high fluid pressures and low stresses. Here we use numerical models to explore the transient slip characteristics of finite-width frictional-viscous shear zones. Our model formulation utilizes an invariant form of rate- and state-dependent friction (RSF) and simulates earthquakes along spontaneously evolving faults embedded in a 2D continuum. The setup includes two elastic plates bounding a viscoelastoplastic shear zone (subduction interface) with inclusions (clasts) of varying sizes, aspect ratios, distributions and viscosity contrasts with respect to the surrounding matrix. The entire shear zone exhibits the same velocity-weakening RSF parameters, but the low viscosity matrix in the shear zone has the capacity to switch between RSF and linear viscous creep as a function of its local viscosity and stress state. Results show that for a range of matrix viscosities near a threshold viscosity (representative of the frictional-viscous transition), viscous damping and stress heterogeneity in these shear zones both 1) sets the ‘speed limit’ for earthquake ruptures that nucleate in clasts such that they propagate at velocities similar to observed slow slip events; and 2) simultaneously permits the transmission of slow slip from clast to clast, allowing slow ruptures to propagate substantial distances over the model domain. For reasonable input parameters, modeled events have moment-duration statistics, stress drops, and rupture propagation rates that match natural slow slip events. Events resembling very low-frequency earthquakes appear to be favored at high clast densities and low matrix viscosities, whereas longer duration, higher-magnitude slow slip events are favored at intermediate clast densities and near-threshold viscosities. These model results have potential to reconcile geophysical constraints on slow slip phenomena with the exhumed geological record of the slow slip environment.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paraskevi Io Ioannidi ◽  
Laetitia Le Pourhiet ◽  
Onno Oncken ◽  
Philippe Agard ◽  
Samuel Angiboust

<p>The physical nature and the rheology of a subduction shear zone play an important role in the deformation and the degree of locking along its interface with the upper plate. Inspired from exhumed subduction shear zones that exhibit block-in-matrix characteristics (mélanges), we create synthetic models with different proportions of strong clasts within a weak matrix and compare them to natural mélange outcrops. Using 2D Finite Element visco-plastic numerical simulations and simple shear kinematic conditions, we determine the effective rheological parameters of such a two-phase medium, comprising blocks of basalt embedded within a wet quartzitic matrix. We treat our models and their structures as scale-independent and self-similar and upscale published field geometries to km-scale models, compatible with large-scale far-field observations. Exhumed subduction mélanges suggest that deformation is mainly taken up by dissolution-precipitation creep. However, such flow laws are neither well-established yet experimentally nor of ample use in numerical modelling studies. In order to make our results comparable to and usable by numerical studies, we assume dislocation creep as the governing flow law for both basalt and wet quartz and by using different pressures, temperatures and strain rates we provide effective rheological estimates for a natural subduction interface. Our results suggest that the block-in-matrix ratio affects deformation and strain localization, with the effective dislocation creep parameters varying between the values of the strong and the weak phase, in cases where deformation of both materials is purely viscous. As the contribution of brittle deformation of the strong blocks increases, however, the value of the stress exponent, n, can exceed that of the purely strong phase.</p>


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